Nephrology - Acid base Flashcards
1
Q
Normal anion gap metabolic acidosis
A
- ammonium chloride injection
- diarrhoea
- fistula
- acetazolamide
- Addison’s disease
- renal tubular acidosis
- ureterosigmoidostomy
- Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (e.g., topiramate, acetazolamide)
- Chemotherapy (e.g, ifosfamide, cisplatin)
- Antibiotics (e.g., aminoglycosides, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole)
- Amphotericin B
- Lithium
- Pentamidine
- Rifampin
- Inhaled toluene
2
Q
Raised anion gap metabolic acidosis
A
- renal failure
- hypoxia
- diabetic ketoacidosis
- alcohol poisoning
- shock
- salicylate poisoning
3
Q
Low Anion Gap (<6)
A
- Lab error
- Lithium tox
- Bromide tox
- Hypoalbuminemia
- Paraproteinemias
- Severe hypercalcemia/hypermagnesemia
4
Q
causes of combined respiratory and metabolic acidosis
A
- Acute cardiac failure.
- Severe exacerbation of obstructive airways disease and pre-renal failure from diuretics.
- Aspirin poisoning
- Severe pneumonia with renal failure due to septicaemia or interstitial nephritis (Legionnaire’s disease)
- Septicaemia from any cause complicated by ARDS
- Malaria complicated by pneumonia
- Acute renal failure and fluid overload
- Renal pulmonary syndromes: anti-GBM disease, Wegener’s granulomatosis, microscopic polyarteritis nodosa
- Acute massive pulmonary embolism
- Cardiac arrest (before ventilation)
5
Q
Metabolic alkalosis
A
- Bartter’s syndrome
- hypokalaemia
- carbenoxolone
- primary hyperaldosteronism
- congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- diuretics
- Cushing’s syndrome
- vomiting / aspiration
- liquorice
6
Q
Hypokalemia with alkalosis
A
- vomiting
- diuretics
- Cushing’s syndrome
- Conn’s syndrome (primary hyperaldosteronism)
Medstudy
- Reduction in effective arterial blood volume
- Volume contraction: vomiting, NG suction, bleeding, or diuretics (thiazides and loops)
- Renovascular disease: renal artery stenosis or fibromuscular dysplasia
- 2° hyperaldosteronism: severe HF, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome
- 1° aldosteronism
- Renin-secreting tumor
- Cushing syndrome
- Liddle’s, Bartter’s, and Gitelman’s
7
Q
Hypokalemia with acidosis
A
- diarrhoea
- renal tubular acidosis
- acetazolamide
- partially treated diabetic ketoacidosis
8
Q
Causes of respiratory alkalosis
A
Due to stimulation of the central nervous system
- Anxiety
- Hypoxia
- Salicylate poisoning
- Encephalitis
- Brainstem injury
Due to pulmonary disease
- Asthma
- Pneumonia
- Lung fibrosis
- Pulmonary oedema
- Pulmonary embolus
9
Q
Causes of chloride-responsive
metabolic alkalosis
A
- Vomiting,
- nasogastric suction,
- postdiuretic use, and
- posthypercapnic states
Note: urine chloride concentrations less than 15 mEq/L
10
Q
Causes of chloride-resistant metabolic alkalosis
A
- mineralocorticoid excess,
- current diuretic administration,
- milk-alkali syndrome,
- Bartter syndrome, and
- severe hypokalemia
Note: urine chloride concentrations over 20 mEq/L.